Linda Heard -
If the US and Russia continue a course of mutual belligerency — albeit
gloved — the road to Armageddon will be short.
The West must understand that Russia newly flushed with energy wealth
is no longer an underdog but a major world player. Russia, in its turn,
must quit sending its bombers to tease Western countries. The US should
come to terms with the fact it's no longer the only policeman on the
block.
People are generally given to shrugging off mentions of a third world
war. This is mainly because the next one could be mankind's last. Those
who sprinkle their speeches or articles with dire warnings of a massive
nuclear conflagration are often written off as scaremongers. Those who
lived through the horrors of World War II and later witnessed the
battered planet coming together to draft the Geneva Conventions and
form the United Nations had hope that we had truly learned our lesson.
Never again!
Surely it is inconceivable that world leaders would be prepared to put
their nations on a suicidal collision course for any reason. Indeed,
even during the most critical periods of the 45-year-long Cold War
between the former Soviet Union and the United States, successive
leaders on both sides of the Iron Curtain were careful to exercise
restraint.
It was, therefore, surprising - nay shocking - to hear President George
Bush admit he had told world leaders "If you're interested in avoiding
World War III, it seems like you ought to be interested in preventing
Iran from having the knowledge necessary to make a nuclear weapon".
Was this a warning? Was this a threat, or was it merely overblown
rhetoric intended to be a global wake-up call? Whatever the intent
behind the statement, it brought the ugly specter of another world war
back into the public conscious as a potential reality.
President Bush refrained from spelling out who the protagonists of any
such world war might be but in light of the current cool climate
between the US and Russia — and to a lesser extent between the US and
China — over ways to eliminate Iran's uranium enrichment program one
can be forgiven for speculating.
There is no doubt, too, that Russia is increasingly flexing its newly
developed muscle. Earlier this month, Caspian Sea states (including
Iran) signed a declaration upon Russia's urging to the effect they will
never allow their soil to be used by a foreign country to launch a
military attack against another Caspian nation. They also stressed that
all signatories to the NPT have the right to generate and utilize
nuclear energy for peaceful purposes — a snub to US thinking.
Russia's President Vladimir Putin has told Washington in no uncertain
terms that his country will not accept military strikes on Iran and
reinforced that message with an unprecedented invitation to the Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to visit him in Moscow.
Pundits noted that the body language between Putin and Ahmadinejad
appeared jolly and relaxed in contrast to the Russian leader's earlier
more sober meetings with Germany's Chancellor Merkel and France's
President Sarkozy.
And last week, Putin turned his ire on Bush comparing the stringent new
US sanctions against Iran and the American president's attitude toward
Tehran with that of a madman "running about with a razor blade in his
hand". Putin believes the sanctions will achieve little other than to
undermine any hope of constructive dialogue between Iran and the West.
Highlighting the reality of war talk in the air, the Director-General
of the Kazakhstan Institute of Strategic Studies Dr. Bulat K. Sultanov
was recently driven to announce that Kazakhstan would side with Russia
in case of a US-Russia confrontation. Wouldn't such a confrontation
amount to World War III?
But the method of ensuring Iran does not acquire the ability to
manufacture nuclear weapons is far from being the only bone of
contention between Russia and the US.
Russia vehemently objects to what it views as Washington's interference
in the politics of former Soviet republics. Moreover, the two nuclear
giants do not see eye-to-eye on an independent Kosovo and neither can
they agree on Bush's plan to deploy a missile interceptors in Poland
and a radar-tracking facility in the Czech Republic, which Russia
believes would pose a threat to it despite American assurances to the
contrary.
Last week, the Russian leader compared the atmosphere surrounding the
US missile defense proposal with a severity parallel to the Cuban
missile crisis in the early 1960s when the Cold War heated up to the
point of becoming a nuclear confrontation.
"For us the situation is technologically very similar," he said. "We
have withdrawn the remains of our bases from Vietnam, from Cuba and
have liquidated everything there, while at our borders such threats
against our country are being created".
Russia has also warned that the stationing of US weapons in space would
trigger a full-scale arms race between Russia and the West. "We don't
want to fight in space," said a Russian commander, but "the
consequences of positioning strike forces in orbit will be too serious".
Putin did, however, mitigate his comments by referring to President
Bush as a personal friend and allowing that Washington appears to be
listening to Russian concerns.
In the end this is a dangerous power play, which risks ending in
unwanted and unforeseen consequences for either side. Russia's nuclear
bombers have resumed their Cold War-style routine flights and, in
August this year, flew close to the US Pacific island of Guam; close
enough to "exchange smiles" with US pilots on aircraft carriers.
A month earlier, in July, Britain scrambled RAF Tornado fighter jets to
prevent Russian bombers from entering British airspace - a provocative
near incursion at a time when London and Moscow had withdrawn their
diplomats over Russia's refusal to extradite a murder suspect.
What if one of those pilots on either side of the divide had unleashed
his firepower, fearing his country was under serious threat? Despite
the damage, cooler heads may have prevailed, or, on the other hand,
there could have been massive retaliation in kind.
Back to the question: Is World War III inevitable?
If the US and Russia continue a course of mutual belligerency - albeit
gloved - the road to Armageddon will be short.
The West must understand that Russia newly flushed with energy wealth
is no longer an underdog but a major world player. Russia, in its turn,
must quit sending its bombers to tease Western countries. The US should
come to terms with the fact it's no longer the only policeman on the
block. The age of the sole superpower has to make way for a multipolar
world. Only when big powers learn to treat one another with respect can
the rest of us continue sleeping soundly at night
Original
Source
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